Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Purpose and Perfection Through Suffering

Hebrews 5:7: "During the days of Jesus' life on earth, he offered up prayers and petitions with loud cries and tears to the one who could save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverent submission. Although he was a son, he learned obedience from what he suffered and, once made perfect, he became the source of eternal salvation for all who obey him."

Suffering is never a desired experience. None of us wants to traverse the paths of difficulty; instead, we find deep within ourselves a hope that our life experience will be one filled with lots of blessings and happiness. Still, we recognize that a life immune from headaches and heartaches is just not reality. Though it will be packaged a bit differently for each of us, we all will encounter painful ordeals that truly test our faith.

For those of us who already have been to the brink of despair, we likely have asked the proverbial "Why" questions: "Why? . . . Why God would you allow this to happen? . . . Why am I the one that has to go through this pain? Why does it seem that others have a much easier life?"

From the above scripture, we see that God the Father took Jesus His Son down some very difficult roads, but it was not without purpose. We find that Jesus learned obedience through His suffering. As Jesus "grew in wisdom" (see Luke 2:52), He was instructed by the Father that His suffering was helping to better understand that God the Father was using the experience of rejection, alienation, persecution, and ultimately crucifixion to accomplish His Divine calling as the perfect, atoning sacrifice for the sins of the world. And as Jesus "reverently submitted" to the will of the Father, He became the solely sufficient remedy for our justification . . . He alone paid our sin debt, thus turning away God's just wrath towards us!

Still, this did not mean that Jesus did not anguish in the midst of His ordeal, for the scriptures tell us that He "offered up prayers and petitions with loud cries and tears." Jesus did not gloss over the experience, trying to be happy about his plot in life; rather, He was very real and transparent with the Father, knowing that if there were another way . . . He would seek the Father's deliverance. Matthew 26:39 tells us that Jesus "fell on his face to the ground and he prayed, 'My Father, if it is possible, may this cup be taken from me. Yet not as I will, but as you will.'" We know that God the Father heard Jesus' pleas; still, the cup of suffering would be poured out upon Him. It is not that God the Father didn't care; rather, He affirmed to Jesus His Divine work of love in offering the world hope through His death and resurrection. A greater and more glorious purpose was to be accomplished through suffering!

This is a good word for each of us. When life takes us through very dark valleys, it is most appropriate to cry out to the Lord for His presence with us and His deliverance of us. Still, we must submit to His divine will and purpose, even if such purposes result in our suffering. What we can be assured of is the fact that God will hear our pleas as we reverently submit to Him in the midst of our difficulty. We too can recognize that God is perfecting us as we endure our tribulation, for we know that our sufferings produce perseverance, character, and a longing for Heaven, when Jesus will make all things new (see Romans 5:3-4, Revelation 21:5). Suffering makes us aware of God, and it fosters a dependency upon Him. Suffering too heightens our intimacy with Him, as it orients our purpose to His glorious will. Ultimately, suffering makes us long for our eternal life with Him. To have such a disposition is EXACTLY where God wants us to be!

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